December 3, 2007

   
LOGIN | SUBSCRIBE | GUIDEBOOKS | ARCHIVE SEARCH | CONTACT US |
| Home
| Top Story
| Business & Real Estate
| Arts, Travel & Fishing >
| The Nica Times
| Daily News
| Letters to the Editor
| Photo Galleries >
| Classified Ads >
| Exchange Rates
Central Bank
Reference Rate

BUY ˘496.24 SELL ˘502.28

Serving Justice: Former President of the Supreme Court Ulises Odio was recently awarded the Latin-American Iberian Award by the region's Judical Ethics committee for his six-year term as head of the court and 45-year legal career.

Photo courtesy
of the Judicial Branch.
| Previous Daily News
| Monday | Tuesday
| Wednesday | Thursday
| Friday

The End of an Era: President Oscar Arias recognized a former Costa Rican soldier Saturday during a ceremony to celebrate the 59 th anniversary of the country abolishing its military.

Photo courtesy of Casa Presidencial

Costa Rica Hosts International Conference on Torture Prevention

Representatives from 11 Latin American countries united this week in Costa Rica for a workshop on preventing torture organized by the United Nations and the Swiss nonprofit Association for the Prevention of Torture (APT).
See More...

Costa Rica Celebrates 59 Years with No Military

With talk of renewing efforts toward world peace, Costa Rica celebrated the 59 th anniversary of the abolition of its military Saturday.
See More...

Frontier Inaugurates Flights to Costa Rica

The U.S.-based Frontier Airlines symbolically embarked on new territory Friday with its inaugural flight from Denver International Airport to Juan Santamaría International Airport, just northwest of San José.

Costa Rica and Russia Analyze U.N. Security Council Agenda

Costa Rican and Russian diplomats spoke Friday about the U.N. Security Council's agenda as Costa Rica prepares to assume a nonpermanent seat on the council next year, according to a statement from the Foreign Ministry.

Report from the End Zone

I found my editor, Dan Ferguson, in an unusually jovial mood. “The old,” he said, “are not like us; they got here first.” I thought that was pretty good, until I realized it was just a paraphrase of an old F. Scott Fitzgerald quip about the rich. But Dan went on without waiting for applause: “So get out there and find out what they're up to.”

 


Costa Rica Hosts International
Conference on Torture Prevention

Representatives from 11 Latin American countries united this week in Costa Rica for a workshop on preventing torture organized by the United Nations and the Swiss nonprofit Association for the Prevention of Torture (APT).

Human rights experts from around the region visited Costa Rican prisons including La Reforma Penitentiary and Buen Pastor women's prison. They also toured a shelter for “immigrants in transit” in the San José suburb of Hatillo, according to a statement from the Public Security Ministry.

Afterwards, the group made a few suggestions about how to improve the services offered there.

The goal of the meeting was to standardize regional criteria for the treatment of detainees and correct negative practices implemented in some countries, explained Claudia Gérez, a representative of the association.

Costa Rica was chosen to host the event because of its role as a leading protector of human rights in the treatment of prisoners. The country has also traditionally dealt with a large number of illegal immigrants.

-Tico Times


Costa Rica Celebrates 59 Years with No Military

With talk of renewing efforts toward world peace, Costa Rica celebrated the 59 th anniversary of the abolition of its military Saturday.

President Oscar Arias, other leaders and former Costa Rican soldiers gathered for a ceremony at the National Museum in downtown San José.

The President said that while 59 years with no army is a significant achievement, the country still has much to do to promote world peace.

“How can we be satisfied if while our children walk to school, children in the Sudan flee the villages where their parents have been killed?” he asked. “How can we be satisfied if while our young people get their first job, the job of other young people is to go fight in Iraq ? How can we be satisfied if while our families look for where to build their houses, families in the Congo look for where to sleep in camps with thousands of refugees?”

He urged Costa Ricans to do something about these international injustices by supporting efforts to reduce arms trading.

Costa Rica's army was abolished on Dec. 1, 1948 by then-President José “Pepe” Figueres.

-Tico Times


Frontier Inaugurates Flights to Costa Rica

The U.S.-based Frontier Airlines symbolically embarked on new territory Friday with its inaugural flight from Denver International Airport to Juan Santamaría International Airport, just northwest of San José.

Frontier is offering this flight four times a week, said Tourism Minister Carlos Benavides in a statement from the Costa Rican Tourism Institute (ICT). The airline has said it will consider adding a fifth flight in January.

The route is being serviced by an Airbus 319 with space for 132 passengers.

Frontier vice-president Cliff Van Leuven said the airline decided to expand to Costa Rica because of the country's “diversity of landscapes and natural wonders, which range from beautiful beaches to incredible forest reserves to powerful volcanoes.”

“These natural riches are necessary components to satisfy the tastes of tourists who are looking for a vacation destination with many options for resting, entertainment and adventure,” he said.

Frontier Airlines has been operating for 14 years and is the second largest transportation provider at Denver International Airport, offering an average of 350 flights to 62 destinations in the United States, Mexico, Canada and Costa Rica, the statement said.

-Tico Times


Costa Rica and Russia Analyze
U.N. Security Council Agenda

Costa Rican and Russian diplomats spoke Friday about the U.N. Security Council's agenda as Costa Rica prepares to assume a nonpermanent seat on the council next year, according to a statement from the Foreign Ministry.

The meeting -- held at Casa Amarilla, or the Foreign Ministry -- was the first of a series Costa Rica will have with permanent members of the U.N. Security Council.

Costa Rican officials are also scheduled to meet this week with experts from Belgium, which will join Costa Rica in holding a two-year seat on the council beginning Jan. 1, 2008.

The Russian delegation was headed by Russian Ambassador to Costa Rica Nikolaenko Valery as well as the Russian Foreign Ministry's Director of International Organizations Alexander Kanuzin.

With Costa Rican Foreign Ministry officials, they discussed the Security Council's international agenda and shared opinions on matters facing the United Nations including terrorism, disarmament and climate change.

On Oct. 16, Costa Rica was voted to a nonpermanent seat on the Security Council, representing the Group of Latin American and Caribbean Countries.

Foreign Minister Bruno Stagno campaigned around the world for the seat, promoting Costa Rica's agenda of human rights, multilateralism and an international arms-trade treaty.

Costa Rica held previous nonpermanent seats on the council from 1974-75 and 1997-98.

-Tico Times


Report from the End Zone

I found my editor, Dan Ferguson, in an unusually jovial mood. “The old,” he said, “are not like us; they got here first.” I thought that was pretty good, until I realized it was just a paraphrase of an old F. Scott Fitzgerald quip about the rich. But Dan went on without waiting for applause: “So get out there and find out what they're up to.”

All of which was so typical of Dan that it took no time to figure out that as the National Health (Revision) Bill was coming up for a first reading in July, he probably wanted to know which way the senior vote was likely to go. But Dan was not the kind of man to explain himself to a rookie reporter, and as he was my boss, I did as he asked.

My first stop was at the Bide a Wee retirement home, which admitted only seniors over 80, unisex. There were several dozen inmates and, to my surprise, at least eight women to every male, which tells us something about the frailty of man.

But even more surprising, each male had his own circle of complaisant females. Not that moral considerations were likely to arise here, but, probably because the ladies had grown up in a patriarchal society, now long gone, they found it comfortable to defer to the nearest male.

Actually, nearly a quarter of the inmates had long ago retired into their own private world of Alzheimer's, Parkinson's or intractable pain, and remained unresponsive to questioning. But the rest were quite alert and eager to talk to someone from the outside world, even if he was just a nosey reporter, except that they had apparently lost all interest in politics.

So far as I could make out, after decades of broken promises, they had all decided that no politician of any stripe could be trusted to give them so much as the time of day, either before or after an election, so why bother with the bounder?

Disappointed by this negative reaction, I went on to several other retirement homes, and concluded that fewer than one percent of their inmates had the slightest intention of voting in the next general election, let alone supplying an opinion about the upcoming bill.

So much for Dan's news story.

My last group was made up of self-employed professionals such as doctors, lawyers and architects who were still practicing at an advanced age. These busy people, being disinclined to wait around in public clinics, generally belonged to private health groups and so had no interest in the fate of Dan's bill.

But aside from politics, from the answers they gave to my questions, it was evident that this group, males and females alike, rarely took sick and even then resisted going to a doctor until virtually at death's door. Presumably there is something about self-employment and keeping busy that protects these people against the ills that beset us common folk.

So in the end I didn't have much to give Dan, other than the standard advice we all get and routinely ignore: choose the right parents, eat and drink wisely, stay involved and avoid politicians like the plague. As I was leaving Dan's office, I added, “And by the way, the old don't give a damn about your National Health Bill!”

And I slammed the door behind me.

Costa Rica dentist, health, teeth whitening, crowns, dental implants, bleaching, crowns, permanent make-up
Tico Times, Costa Rica, travel guide, guidebook, beaches, rainforests, hotels, activities, restaurants
Costa Rica gated community, Costa Rican real estate, Santa Ana, living in Costa Rica, moving to Costa Rica
 
RETURN TO THE TOP OF PAGE

HOME | SUBSCRIBE | ADVERTISE | GUIDEBOOKS | BACK ISSUES | ARCHIVE SEARCH | CONTACT US | ABOUT US | NEWSSTANDS | LINKS